Armoured
Battalion Insect Beetras a last gasp from the innovative Japanese
company Takatoku Toys.

Takatoku
had spent much of the late 1970s competing with Popy in the Super Robot
market. Their Z-Gokin series featured licensed diecast robots
from series such as X-Bomber,
Daikengo, Goshogun, Captain Harlock and the J-9
trilogy. Unlike Popy (and most of their contemporaries), they were able
to shift when the success of Mobile
Suit Gundam moved the goal posts, replacing fantastical super
robots with science fiction style military hardware.

Their
big success in this area was Macross. Not only was the series
(made in association with Big West) a huge hit, but Takatoku devised
the classic Kanzen Henkei ('Perfectly Transforming') 1/55 scale
VF-1 Valkyrie mecha. This was arguably the first transforming robot
toy to pay equal attention to the accuracy of both robot and vehicle
modes, and was hugely popular - the mould was so well received Takatoku
were able to base the line around it, selling six variants with slight
changes.

Buoyed
by this success, the company partnered Big West again for Orguss.
However, the storyline and mecha designs weren't as popular, and Orguss
would be an expensive flop for Takatoku, even if the anime retains a
following. Takatoku then tried to revisit the realism of Macross,
linking up with Ashi Productions to make the action/hardware orientated
Dorvack. The line was another disaster, with the relatively basic
storyline of the anime failing to find many fans and the merchandise
failing to sell accordingly.

So,
by the time of Beetras, Takatoku were on the skids. They persisted with
the real robot/Kanzen Henkei ethos, and engaged Artmic Studios to design
mecha for a new line, Beetras. Designer Shinji Aramaki devised
five transforming insect mecha for the primary characters - Beet-Gadol,
Beet-Gugal, Beet-Papil, Beet-Vadam and Beet-Zeguna. However, Takatoku's
financial situation was worsening at some speed. No anime was ever produced,
while the toyline was scaled down first to four figures (with Beet-Papil
seemingly abandoned at the design stage), then to three (with Beet-Vadam
never entering production). Even these cutbacks weren't enough, and
shortly after the figures were released, Takatoku finally folded completely.

That
wasn't quite the end for the Beetras figures, however. Mark (who
had an ongoing agreement to produce budget versions of Takatoku toys)
produced simplified, all-plastic Beetras figures under the name
of Zectron. I'd guess, having paid the fee for use of the basic
designs, Mark then saw no reason to tie the things in to a dead brand
with no TV support. Two of these figures were then licensed to American
manufacturer Select, who used them as Insectors in the second year of
their Convertors
brand (the Beet-Zeguna design being used for Crawler,
and the Beet-Vadam design becoming Morphus).

The
moulds themselves were acquired by Bandai, who were mainly after the
Macross Valkyrie mould and had little interest in the others.
In 1984, Hasbro had licensed Takara's own series of Kanzen Henkei
figures, the Diaclone Real Robot and Microman Microchange
series, and reformatted them into the Transformers brand. This
had been a massive success, and by 1985 Hasbro were unable to match
the demand for new Transformers figures. While Takara worked
on brand new moulds, Hasbro leased the Takatoku figures from Bandai
as a stopgap. The result were the Deluxe Vehicles (two Dorvack
figures) and Deluxe Insecticons (the four Beetras figures). The
deal (which would seem to be separate from that made for the Macross
Valkyrie to be Jetfire) was for a North American licence only, as Bandai
had interests in Europe and (obviously) Asia. The four figures were
recoloured and renamed - Beet-Gadol became Venom, Beet-Gugal became
Chop Shop, Beet-Vadam (the first proper release of the figure) became
Ransack, and Beet-Zeguna became Barrage.
Whether for licensing reasons or just because they were a stop gap,
the Deluxe Insecticons didn't feature in the cartoon series or the American
Marvel comic - though Chop Shop and Venom would randomly show up in
the UK version of the comic four years later, albeit as unspeaking cannon
fodder. Since then they've made occasional appearances in Dreamwave
and IDW's comics in much the same role, usually heavily redesigned.
Because Bandai are now a major rival of Hasbro on the American market,
there's no way they'll be reissued any time soon.

The
Beetras figures that did ship didn't sell well, and while they're
hardly common they're not exactly the most sought after of vintage robots,
mainly being of interest to Takatoku lovers and more hardcore Transformers
fans (the Deluxe Insecticons are probably the most obscure releases
from the line's mid-1980s glory days). However, I managed to find a
boxed Beet-Gugal on ebay. An Italian seller seemed to have come across
a case of the figure left over from 1984 (it's possible Italy received
unsold stock; the packaging is identical to the Japanese version, with
a small sticker bearing a safety warning in Italian slapped on the top).
The box just looks marvellous - I've had vintage figures in well-looked
after boxes before, but the way this looks like I'd just picked it up
in the shop... It's like crack. But probably more expensive in the long
run, if a little less illegal.

The
box is well presented, primarily white with a tasteful band of four
colours running around the bottom half - it's quite reminiscent of the
1984-86 Machine
Robo packaging. The front has a plastic window showing off the
figure, and artwork showing both modes of the Beet-Gugal. There's also
a little blurb in English ('SUPER REAL DIE-CAST/PLASTIC
MODEL & HIGH TECHNOLOGY PRODUCED BY TAKATOKU TOYS' - fantastic!),
and a little list of stats as seen on other Takatoku Kanzen Henkei
lines. The back includes a blurb, which I think is the Beetras
storyline (a translation of which can be read at the ToyboxDX
Datafile
on the series), a picture of the four figures in a underground diorama
(as seen above), and character
models of the four mecha and their pilots. I'm guessing these were
planned for the anime that never happened. I couldn't tell you which
pilot is which, sorry... I think the mecha are presented in the order
they were numbered for the toyline, though - Beet-Gadol as #1, Beet-Gugal
as #2 (hence the large silver '2' on the spine of the box), Beet-Zeguna
as #3 and the unreleased Beet-Vadam as #4.

All
of which makes it a bit of a shame that Beet-Gugal isn't particularly
impressive. I've owned a heavily damaged Chop Shop in the past (during
an abortive attempt to collect the Mayhem Attack Squad... I had him,
Carnivac, Catilla and half of Battletrap before realising what a dreadful
bunch of figures they made), and knew more or less what I was getting
- an interesting, if rather flawed figure that shows its' age. I'm not
sure the flatter 'real version' colours are much of an improvement.
While the dark grey/light grey colour scheme might appeal to mecha fans
a bit more, at least the Transformers brown/orange scheme had
a bit more impact.

That
said, the design itself is quite nice. Disregarding their unusually
strong characterisation, I always felt the Deluxe Insecticons were better-looking
figures than their more famous Diaclone-sourced predecessors.
There's more balance to both modes, and the robot ornamentation looks
a lot more natural as a result, whereas the original Insecticons always
looked like normal robots with a few antennae and legs grafted on.

Beet-Gugal
is probably the most impressive of the lot, with the giant horns sprouting
out of the shoulders and framing the excellent head design, and the
thick, sturdy beetle legs coming out of the arms. The robot legs are
a bit more if a qualified success - the work to hide the last two insect
legs inside them is nice, but the two shell halves hanging off the sides
are less impressive.

Articulation
is at the shoulders, hips and knees. The leg movement isn't bad, but
sadly the arms can only rotate up or down parallel to the body, which
makes his lovely little weapons practically useless. It's a baffling
limitation considering Takatoku's standard in past Kanzen Henkei lines,
maybe hinting at a tight design budget and no resources to work out
how to get more normal movement out of them without having to redesign
the whole chest. It seems quite churlish to pick on a figure for not
having its' arms move in a certain direction, but aside from a handful
of very sloppy Transformers, I'm struggling to think of many
other robot toys that can't move their arms in front of them. The other
slight frustration is that the two chest-plate/shoulder parts don't
really lock into place on the torso. Still, Beet-Gugal is nicely proportioned
and looks mighty impressive standing to attention, even if his range
is somewhat limited.

The
transformation process is surprisingly complex for such a small figure,
with some ingenious touches. As well as the chest halves moving to cover
the head and the leg arrangement mentioned above, the compacting of
the spring-loaded arms is a neat touch. However, Beet-Gugal is delicate.
The plastic is thin and brittle in places, especially on the legs, and
this cuts down on the fun quite a bit - nothing worst than handling
a figure that feels like it's going to break in your hands.

Again,
though, the toy looks impressive. The mode is based on a stag beetle,
but a mechanised version. It's less abstract than the Diaclone Insecticons,
while retaining a mechanical look - I especially like the little jets
on the back. It just looks coherent, which is nice. The real surprise
is that all six insect legs are mounted on ball joints - surely one
of the earliest uses on a transforming robot, and something which makes
the mode quite poseable. Nearly all the light grey parts are hidden
in this mode quite neatly, even from underneath. It should be noted
that Beet-Gugal comes with a sticker sheet containing 18 tiny detail
symbols that I've yet to summon up the courage to tackle...

While
flawed, Beet-Gugal is an interesting figure that certainly deserves
to be a bit better known. While the design probably deserves a better
fate than being effectively a footnote in the history of both Takatoku
and the Transformers brand, at least it means someone's still
heard of it. You could do worse than hunting one of these guys, or their
Hasbro/Bandai successors, down.